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State Fair Masters Program
   Profiles of 2007 State Fair Masters
   Profiles of 2006 State Fair Masters
   Profiles of 2005 State Fair Masters
   Profiles of 2004 State Fair Masters
   Profiles of 2003 State Fair Masters
   Profiles of 2002 State Fair Masters
   Profiles of 2001 State Fair Masters

Traditional Arts Indiana State Fair Fiddle Contest
Indiana University Day
Video Series

TAI Day at the Fair
   2007 performance stage
   2006 performance stage
   2005 performance stage
   2004 performance stage
   2003 performance stage
   2002 performance stage
   2001 performance stage
   2000 performance stage
Little girl looks on as her mother speaks with a member of the Indiana Hooked Rug Association in the Pioneer Village during the 2000 Indiana State Fair. Photo by Erin Roth.
 
Exhibit in the Agriculture/Horticulture Junior and Open-Class. State Fair 2001. Photo by Lisa Gabbert.

There is no place quite like the Fair.
Grand champion heifers, perfectly pieced quilts, magnificent draft teams, purple-ribbon pies. Long-time exhibitors add yet another ribbon to their collections. First-time 4-H kids nervously await the judge's decision. Visual delights, delicious smells, and festive sounds combine to create a special moment in time when everyday lives are suspended and we are surrounded by the efforts of so many doing their very best. There is no place quite like the Fair.

Mrs. Hubert Sayler from Crawfordsville won the Women's Building Sweepstakes Award for her angel food cake at the 1947 State Fair. Photo courtesy of the Indiana State Archive.
Since 1852, the Indiana State Fair has encouraged sharing through exhibition and friendly competition. Historically rooted in a common desire to improve upon an agrarian way of life, the State Fair has grown into a celebration that lures all Hoosiers, urban as well as rural folks from all over Indiana.

At the fair, the everyday reveals its artistic dimensions.
Few who exhibit at fairs would call themselves artists. But many have gained reputations within their communities and among fair judges as gifted bakers, woodworkers, seamstresses, breeders. Over the years, these masters have fine-tuned their skills, learned from family, from friends, from the many who have gone before.

Traditional Arts Indiana and the Indiana State Fair have joined hands to bring Indiana's masters - old and new - to the attention of fair-bound audiences through a variety of programs:

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